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    Further evidence of Shamnesty International as American mouthpiece: Swedish branch exposes itself Archived Message

    Posted by margo on June 1, 2019, 10:51 am

    Need to raise awareness of how Amnesty International refuses to name Assange and Manning as 'prisoners of conscience'

    Swedish Amnesty International voted to reject human rights support on Assange, Snowden and Guantanamo prisoners
    Prof Marcello Ferrarda de Noli

    ProfessorsBlog -- Corresponding perfectly to the paradigm shift in the Swedish government’s geopolitics from “Neutrality” to blunt US-NATO subservience, Amnesty International Sweden ceased being a critical human rights organization – to be converted in yet another Swedish vassal institution aimed to the implementation of the US government’s agenda.

    It is imperative for the worldwide credibility of Amnesty International to act promptly and clarify their stance regarding the Swedish Section.

    How come after five years, whistle-blower Chelsea Manning is still not recognized by Amnesty Sweden as Prisoner of Conscience in the US, while they took only a couple of weeks to declare “Pussy riot” Prisoner of Conscience in Russia?

    This report is followed by an interview with Dr. Leif Elinder on the events at the Amnesty annual meeting in Malmö, back in 2014.

    A background on the situation at Amnesty Sweden with regard to the issues here below, is found in the article by Dr. Leif Elinder, “A democratic Swedish ‘Amnesty International’ should support whistleblowers”, also published in The Professors’ Blog.

    The annual convention of Amnesty-International Sweden ended in Malmö with the voting by the delegates on what Amnesty’s actions shall be for the future. There, the Board of directors of Amnesty International Sweden presented as “main proposals”:

    Previous Message
    That the delegates reject initiatives by the grass-roots asking Amnesty-Sweden to work for that the Swedish government gives guarantees that Julian Assange will not be extradited to the US.


    That the delegates reject initiatives by the grass-roots asking Amnesty-Sweden to work for that the Swedish government grants asylum to Edward Snowden.

    That the delegates reject initiatives by the grass-roots of making compulsory to the Amnesty-Sweden Board to implement a campaign for the liberation of all prisoners at Guantanamo who cannot be convicted in a civilian court.

    That the delegates reject initiatives by the grass-roots asking Amnesty-Sweden to work for that the responsible of the war-crimes in Gaza be taken to the International Court of Justice, ICJ.

    That the delegates reject initiatives by the grass-roots asking Amnesty-Sweden to work for denouncing the mistreatment and tortures of Palestine children detained at the Israeli legal system.



    The board’s proposals above won with a clear majority of votes from the delegates.

    The Board presented as well other proposals that were approved by the delegates, such as a variety of economic details regarding remuneration for the members of the board of Amnesty International Sweden:

    Interview with Dr. Leif Elinder, 11 May 2014.

    The Professors’ Blog [TPB} happy with the tea and apple pie, interviewing Dr. Leif Elinder [LE] at the Grand Hotel in Lund, who looks not too happy after the grass-roots’ setback in the remarkably Amnesty Sweden meeting in Malmö.
    Dr. Elinder has pioneered proposals at Amnesty on the issues of Assange, Snowden, and the Guantanamo prisoners since long.
    Leif Elinder is a renowned Swedish doctor in pediatric medicine and a human-rights advocate, and he has also intervened in vital scientific research debates.

    TPB – The position of Amnesty-Sweden’s board members was known already, through your op-ed published by us, and in Swedish by Prof. Anders Rommesjö on Jinge.se. So I will ask you about the rest of the delegates, how come that the majority of delegates voted against your proposals on this variety of human-rights issues?

    LE – My impression is that the delegates in general, the members of the board included, have only a precarious background-knowledge on the cases of, for instance, Assange and Snowden.

    TPB – But didn’t you have the possibility of explain to the delegates the reasons for your proposals, for instance the updates received since the last vote in 2013 on the situation for Assange in the US?

    LE – Those possibilities were yet limited. As I explained in my op-ed the board changed the procedures by which the proposal-authors could reach the rest of the delegates. To star with, we were scattered in various “opinion-stations” in which we as proposal-authors could elaborate some arguments, but they were operating “simultaneously”, and also picked up by the delegates in voluntary basis; in other words it was clear tat the message would not reach the delegates as a whole.

    Another aspect is that when we finally had the voting today, which happened with all the delegates being present, we (the authors of the respective proposals) were given only two minutes to state our cause. I mean, we were expected to manage in those two minutes, both explaining why the delegates should vote for our proposals, and explaining our criticism to the respective contra-proposal by the board of directors.

    TPB – Would you please give me the exact results, the vote-counting, for each of the grass-roots’ proposals rejected after the board’s suggestions?

    LE – No, I can’t, because the numbers were not given. The “moderator” just asked the delegates to raise one arm as to whether they agree or not with the proposals. That was all. One could see thou that the board proposals – opposing our proposals – had majority.

    TPB – You mean the vote was not secret?

    LE – It was not secret.

    TPB –Well, I guess I could sum up with what you wrote in your op-ed, let me see, “The loser is not just a single proposal from an individual delegate, but also the democratic process as such.”

    LE – Yes

    TPB – Finally, may I ask you what is your feeling about all this, about what happened at the Amnesty meeting?

    LE – The worst is that they, the board, they lied to the delegates about their stance on guarantees of no-extradition for Assange. In the previous discussions they affirmed that a guarantee against extradition it would constitute a breach of the Constitution, “a crime against the Constitution” (“brott mot grundlagen“). That was a a strong argument, and a false argument, that convinced many delegates for not support our proposal on behalf of the human rights of Assange. But now the board is taking distance from that statement, and affirm that what they really meant it was, “it could be hypothetically that way”.

    TPB – Hypothetically? Excuse me, but this new statement from the board seems even worse than the previous one. If it is true that they believed only “hypothetically” it could result in a “crime against the Constitution”, well it is the same than to say that “hypothetically” it was not any crime at all. In either case they were obliged to search for an unequivocal juridical statement before plainly rejecting a proposal based on ignorance, or on that “they did not know what it could happen”.

    Lund, 11 May 2014.

    —–

    P.S. from Prof De Noli: My opinion being that the reason why Amnesty Sweden is chronically rejecting Leif Elinder’s proposals referred to Julian Assange, to Edward Snowden, the Guntanamo prisoners, etc, it is because of the political and ideological agenda they serve. Meaning the Swedish Foreign Office’s, which in turn – regarding for instance the Assange case – acts at the requests of the US government. I invite the reader to review the facts and rationale given in, “Was the reopening of the Sweden case, part of the US request to prosecute Assange by any means? “

    LINK https://professorsblogg.com/2014/05/11/swedish-amnesty-international-voted-for-reject-support-to-human-right-issues-on-assange-snowden-and-guantanamo-prisoners/?fbclid=IwAR3oHLkw9dNCUPUPQ339vP93fFLwjtM1t1VzmynLOVefkU28mRneTz5oWg8

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